Converse in the Spirit: William Blake, Jacob Boehme, and the Creative Spirit
Kevin Fischer

About the Author:
Kevin Fischer was born in London, studied at the University of Manchester and has a Ph.D in English. He has been involved with various aspects of the arts, and works with disabilities for the University of Nottingham, and as a novelist.




Converse in the Spirit is a comparative study of the writings of William Blake and the German visionary philosopher Jacob Boehme. While exploring the influence of Boehme on the poet, it focuses on the relationship between creativity, imagination, and spirituality. Blake and Boehme shared an unorthodox and radical view of the spiritual, rejecting all conventional, literal views of an overseeing God in His Heaven. Underlining the importance to both of a living creative and spiritual tradition, Converse in the Spirit argues that the relationship between Blake and Boehme was a meeting of like minds that transcended place and time, that each regarded himself as part of a community of vision and aspiration, and believed that any predominant form of thought and understanding was only partial. Through this, Boehme is used to illuminate the more esoteric aspects of Blake, and Blake those of Boehme. Their writings are not a simple or direct description of the movements of divinity, nor of what divinity is or is not, but a medium for approaching it, and for participating in the creation of the sacred, the giving of personal, individual form to the divine. This view in turn works towards a fuller appreciation of both the imaginative and spiritual possibilities afforded to the reader through an active engagement with Blake and Boehme, an ongoing "converse in the spirit."

Working through Boehme's visionary scheme in detail, Converse in the Spirit draws parallels with Blake at every stage: with Boehme's view of God's movements out of the Ungrund (the unfathomable nothingness of the diving); the workings of will, desire, and imagination; the relationship between time and eternity; his Seven Properties and Three Principles. Further correspondences are drawn in the discussion of both visionaries' understanding of the fall of Lucifer, the stages of the Creation, the fall of Adam, the mercy of the physical world, the significance of the Incarnation, and the movements of the Last Judgment.

ISBN 0-8386-4006-0, Price $48.50

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